LP-681

Benny Golson - Take A Number From 1 To 10




Released 1961

Recording and Session Information



Benny Golson And His Orchestra
New York, December 13, 1960

Benny Golson, tenor saxophone
10575 You're my thrill

Benny Golson, tenor saxophone; Tommy Williams, bass
10576 My heart belongs to daddy

Benny Golson, tenor saxophone; Tommy Williams, bass; Albert "Tootie" Heath, drums
10577 The best thing for you is me

Benny Golson, tenor saxophone; Cedar Walton, piano; Tommy Williams, bass; Albert "Tootie" Heath, drums
10578 Impromptune

Freddie Hubbard, trumpet; Benny Golson, tenor saxophone; Cedar Walton, piano; Tommy Williams, bass; Albert "Tootie" Heath, drums
New York, December 14, 1960
10579 Little Karin

Freddie Hubbard, trumpet; Curtis Fuller, trombone; Benny Golson, tenor saxophone; Cedar Walton, piano; Tommy Williams, bass; Albert "Tootie" Heath, drums
10580 Swing it

Freddie Hubbard, trumpet; Curtis Fuller, trombone; Benny Golson, tenor saxophone; Sahib Shihab, baritone saxophone; Cedar Walton, piano; Tommy Williams, bass; Albert "Tootie" Heath, drums
10581 I fall in love too easily

Nick Travis, trumpet; Bill Elton, trombone; Willie Ruff, french horn; Benny Golson, Hal McKusicktenor saxophone; Sol Schlinger, baritone saxophone; Tommy Williams, bass; Albert "Tootie" Heath, drums
New York, April 11, 1961
10582 Out of this world

Nick Travis, Bernie Glow, trumpet; Bill Elton, trombone; Willie Ruff, french horn; Benny Golson, Hal McKusicktenor saxophone; Sol Schlinger, baritone saxophone; Tommy Williams, bass; Albert "Tootie" Heath, drums
10583 The touch

Art Farmer, Nick Travis, Bernie Glow, trumpet; Bill Elton, trombone; Willie Ruff, french horn; Benny Golson, Hal McKusick, tenor saxophone; Sol Schlinger, baritone saxophone; Tommy Williams, bass; Albert "Tootie" Heath, drums
10584 Time

Track Listing

You're My ThrillLane, WashingtonDecember 13 1960
My Heart Belongs To DaddyCole PorterDecember 13 1960
The Best Thing For You Is MeDeSylva, Henderson, BrownDecember 13 1960
ImpromptuneBenny GolsonDecember 13 1960
Little KarinBenny GolsonDecember 14 1960
Swing ItBenny GolsonDecember 14 1960
I Fall In Love Too EasilyStyne, CahnDecember 14 1960
Out Of This WorldArlen, MercerApril 11 1961
The TouchBenny GolsonApril 11 1961
TimeBenny GolsonApril 11 1961

Liner Notes

BENNY GOLSON is already strongly established as one of the most consistently fresh and personal composer-arrangers in jazz. What this uniquely challenging album accomplishes - in addition to re-emphasizing his writing capabilities — is to focus on Benny's equally individual power and warmth as a player.

It is by far his most impressive achievement on record as a tenor saxophonist as he ranges from an unaccompanied solo to the leadership of a 10-piece band.

When I first became particularly aware of Benny's playing in Dizzy Gillespie's big band five years ago, I was struck by the invigorating fact that he was one of the very few of the younger players with a big, full tone and a surging lyricism. Although modern in conception, he recalled the richness of Don Byas and the sinewy linear imagination of Lucky Thompson. For a time in recent years, Benny's playing style became less distinctive. There were explosive, multi-noted passages and less concern than before with melodic improvisation.

Now, however, Benny has decided on the direction he prefers; and this album heralds not only the return of his basic, warmly lyrical style but also marks its strengthening. He hasn't lost in any degree his adventurousness, but all elements in his work now part of an integrated, thoroughly distinctive whole.

"We all go through stages," Benny explains. "There are, after all, so many roads to take. Now I'm on the right track for myself. I know what I want to do. I've been working hard during the past year, for example, on an even bigger tone with more roundness and warmth — even in the extreme high register. I want to make the horn sound warm, I also want to play melodically, instead of just running over the horn as I was at one time; but I'd still like to have a command of velocity at my fingertips when I need it. I feel very much better about my playing these days. At one time, I didn't know whether I was coming or going, but I guess it was necessary to try different ways to be sure of my own."

The format of the album is unlike any that Benny — or any other player — has attempted before. Beginning with one instrument, Benny's, an instrument is added on each track culminating in the exciting 10-piece arrangement, Time. The idea was conceived by Benny's manager, Kai Norton, as a frame for Benny's talent as an instrumentalist as well as a composer-arranger.

'It's not a gimmick," Benny emphasizes. "I did all of these with a strong conviction and feeling, because wanted to try them. I'd never recorded before all by myself or with a duo or a trio. And on the last three numbers, there were several techniques I wanted to develop for the first time on records."'It's not a gimmick," Benny emphasizes.

I can only think of Coleman Hawkins and Sonny Rollins as having accepted before the most radical challenge for a soloist — the entirely unaccompanied performance. Benny succeeds nobly on You're My Thrill, retaining a firmly implied pulsation, improvising with sweeping imagination, and demonstrating his particular eloquence at rhapsodic romanticism that docs not, however, become saccharine. It's a bold triumph.

Bassist Tomnmy Williams, a regular member of the Farmer-Golson Jazztet, was added for "My Heart Belongs To Daddy. "Tommy," says Golson, "is one of the very few bassists I'd attempt this with. He has a more melodic approach to his instrument than any bassist I've known except for Oscar Pettiford antl Ray Brown. In fact, he can put some horn players to shame. With Tommy behind you, you really have to be alert in matching melodic imagination." Note, too, Williams' big, round tone and remarkably steady time. Golson plays with a soft but insistent urgency and the two generate an infectious beat while maintaining an overall tenderness of mood.

Drummer "Tootie" Heath, who enters next, is also an associate of Benny in the Jazztet. "He has," Golson emphasizes, "the best cymbal-beat feeling since Art Blakey and Kenny Clarke. He's so sympathetic a drummer, moreover, that the soloists can lay back and rely completely on him." In The Best Thing For You Is Me, Golson plays with resilient lyricism. He communicates a breathy intimacy at the same time as a great feeling of latent power and thrust. The track is also worth replaying just to concentrate on Tommy Williams" solo.

Pianist Cedar Walton completes the Jazztet's regular rhythm section. "He does so much," says Golson, "in the way of getting in and out of those chords. He has the chordal resourcefulness I've always been aiming at in my playing." The instrumentation is now four, and Benny plays one of his originals, Impromptune, which succeeds in connoting spontaneity and a spiraling intensity by all four players through a series of crackling climaxes. The Golson melodic line is characteristically strong and supple.

Trumpeter Freddie Hubbard makes the band a quintet for Little Karin. The darting, insatiably curious Karin of the title is three-year-old Karin Sylvester, daughter of Kay Norton. "Karin," explains Benny, "symbolized childhood to me, and I wanted this tune to reflect those qualities in her that make me want to hug and kiss her."

With Swing It, the first side ends as the band has grown to a sextet. Trombonist Curtis Fuller and Freddie Hubbard were certain, Benny felt, "to bring the spark and drive I wanted for this tune. Freddie is impressive for his feeling and sound. among other qualities. Listen to what he does at the end of phrases. His long, sustained notes end with that slight, vibrato-like shake (somewhat like Howard McGhee's) that makes you feel he's putting his all into it. And Curtis Fuller has grown enormously. He's one of the best out there now." The performance is bristlingly heated with incisive solo contributions by all.

Sahib Shihab, currently with the Quincy Jones band, comes aboard on baritone saxophone in I Fall In Love Too Easily. "The tune," says Benny, "had been going through my mind for a while. It hasn't been overdone, and also, I couldn't recall having heard it used as a vehicle for a jazz tenor. I really enjoyed working with it." Golson's interpretation is soft yet passionate, and flows with unerring logic and swing.

On Out Of This World. the horns are Benny, baritone saxophonist Sol Schlinger, tenor Hal McKusick, trombonist Bill Elton, trumpeter Nick Travis, and Willie Ruff on French horn in addition to Al Heath and Tommy Williams.

Benny had recorded the tune with Jimmy Cleveland and Art Farmer on a Cleveland album. "I like it, but didn't get a chance to really get into it then. Also, it was done in 6/8 on that date, and I heard other possibilities. I wanted an 'out of this world' feeling on the opening: hence the voicings and the changing meters — 5/4 and 2/4 — in the opening rubato section. Also, I used a series of tension chords — half-steps followed by whole steps followed by half steps. It's a close, clashing chordal series with dissonance moving into dissonance rather than resolving into consonance."

Golson meanwhile plays a forcefully assertive solo, followed by Willie Ruff. "At the the verv end," Benny concludes, band plays rhythmic patterns over which I play superimpositions that resolve in and out of the chords."

The Touch has the same personnel as Out Of This World, except for the addition of Bernie Glow on trumpet. "The feeling I tried for," says Benny, "was nostalgic, but lightly so. Structurally it's in 32 bars but harmonically, it moves around in a very unorthodox manner. The chords are likely to go anywhere." As is characteristic of Benny the melody line sounds inevitable, so natural as to be easily remembered and so as to be quickly identified as Golson's.

Art Farmer makes the tenth man On Benny's Time, the first time Art has recorded as a sideman in a year and a half. It's Art who has the trumpet solo. The title has several connotations. "In its broadest sense," Benny points out, "I mean the time that is now, living time, day-by-day time. It's meant to be a real experience of the present. I also meant the flexibility of time within the piece.

"It's in 32 bars. In the first eight bars of each half, I try for mood. There's a rhythmic figure in the bass; the drums ad-lib, fluttering around on the cymbals. The same thing happens in the first eight of the second half. On the second eight each time, we go into strict rhythm — a real swinging-time feeling. The first eight leads up to and accentuates the more directly swinging sections.

"In several places in the album, incidentally, my own playing is concerned with the almost limitless possibilities of superimposition. I mean going out of the key temporarily and resolving back smoothly. Almost anything you play, I've come to find out, can be resolved. Recently, I discovered Dizzy Gillespie has also been working along the same line."

In this program, Benny Golson has subjected himself to one of the most severe tests any jazz player and/or composer has undergone in a single album. In terms of his playing, he gives himself no place to hide in the opening Uou're My Thrill, and then continues to pyramid rhythmic and harmonnic challenges in succeeding tracks.

As a writer, in the last three numbers, he has taken the opportunitv to express himself harmonically in searching ways that have not previously been possible for him with small combos. The album strikingly prove how many parts there are to Benny Golson. It should also illumunate more clearly than ever the singular entity these parts make when finally, as here they're all put together.

Nat Hentoff

LP-680

Ramsey Lewis Trio - More Music From The Soil





Released 1961

Recording and Session Information



Ramsey Lewis Trio
Ramsey Lewis, piano; Eldee Young, bass, cello; Redd Holt, drums
Chicago, February 16 & 17 1961

10699 Around the world in 80 days
10700 Since I fell for you
10701 Hello cello
10702 I'll wait for your love
10703 Volga boatmen
10704 Blues for the night owl
10705 Smoke gets in your eyes
10706 Autumn in New York
10707 Gonna set your soul on fire

Track Listing

Around The World In 80 DaysAdamson, YoungFebruary 16 & 17 1961
Since I Fell For YouB. JohnsonFebruary 16 & 17 1961
Hello, Cello!Young, Lewis, HoltFebruary 16 & 17 1961
I'll Wait For Your LoveDavis, HeadFebruary 16 & 17 1961
Volga BoatmanArranged By – Young, Lewis, HoltFebruary 16 & 17 1961
Blues For The Night OwlBernard, ThompsonFebruary 16 & 17 1961
Smoke Gets In Your EyesKern, HarbachFebruary 16 & 17 1961
Autumn In New YorkVernon DukeFebruary 16 & 17 1961
Gonna Set Your Soul On FireYoung, Lewis, HoltFebruary 16 & 17 1961

Liner Notes

THE seeds of this musical bumper crop were planted long ago when Ramsey Lewis, bassist Eldee Young, and drummer Red Holt played together in a teen-age band in high school days. They grew musically into manhood weed-fast and corn high, and, not long after their trio was formed in late 1956, Jack Tracy, then editor of Down Beat foresaw: "This group could hit the heights of acclaim achieved by such as Shearing, Brubeck, and Garner.

High and mighty, you will hear on this album the finest argument for such a reality and, if you're not careful, the glorious force of it will knock you down. Here is their musical philosophy, their product of maturity, the synthesis of their lives and loves and academic training, their hopes, dreams, and fears boldly stated by young giants at the top of their emotions; unashamed and unafraid to bare hearts as big as the Empire State building. It definitely establishes them as a major force in jazz.

I have been privileged to watch the growth of this trio from close vantage point. I have seen them in north side Chicago cellars when the trio was new and the crowds were small and their names unknown. And I have seen crowds four abreast and rounding a block to hear them at Detroit's Minor Key. I have seen big tears well in the eyes of Ramsey when he takes a little bit of melody up in his finger tips, caressing each note with heartbreaking tenderness. And I have seen Eldee so overcome with his bass that he had to go someplace and sit down. And I have seen Red go mad from the sheer joy of swinging. It is no wonder to that this musical trinity, each of them infused into each other, speaks so eloquently as single voice.

I was also at the birth of this album. Then Ramsey was seated at a big seven-foot Steinway, and five-foot-nothing Eldee, dwarfed by his bass, was made two inches higher because Ramsey had put a pillow under his right foot to muffle the sound of its tapping, They had put an enclosure around Red and sometimes you could see the flash of his teeth bctwccn the 22-inch and 15-inch cymbals. Ramsey had a chart of only 21 bars (some of the changes to Autumn In New York) for the entire session and it rested on the piano top along with Eldee's Austrian rosin, crushed pack of filter tip smokes, and the calling card of an optometrist who had repaired Ramsey's broken glasses that day.

In the control room, engineer Ron Malo mixed the sound from the three microphones and Jack Tracy called out the first tune on side one: "Take One, Around The World In 80 Days." Ramsey kicked it off up tempo. They did it six or seven times before they were satisfied with it and Eldee said quite frankly after it Was over: "I don't have anything to say about this one. It didn't offer much challenge except for the solo, because I hadn't prepared myself for it. I felt I met it, though. I felt it was a completely improvised solo, representing the best I could do at that time. But then I've never played any solo that I didn't think I could improve on." Put in Ramsey: "I found this one exciting but not the best on album." Red just smiled.

Ramsey had a special feeling about the blues ballad I Fell For You because it was written by Paul Gayten, former pianist and now Argo's west coast representative, who encouraged him throughout his career and was one of the first to champion his cause. Hello, Cello! was written by the trio and marked Eldee's recording debut on that instrument, which, with stand extended, was exactly his same height. What you hear on this is an excellent statement, but an earlier take might have been better. It was never completed, however, because in the middle of it Eldee became so emotionally involved he had to put his instrument down for a minute. Eldee liked it, but had little to say of the chosen take. Said Ramsey: "After Eldee irons out himself he will place second only to Oscar Pettiford if not extend him on that instrument." Red just smiled.

I'll Wait For Your Love is a ballad which Ramsey dedicated to the writers, Elizabeth Davis and Robert Head of Pittsburgh. "It's part of our book, one of our most popular tunes and the lyrics are just as effective as the music," Ramsey said, confessing: "I love to play ballads best of all. I'm an incurable romantic and I don't care who knows it." It shows through on this one. The side ends on The Song Of The Volga Boatmen, interesting and up-tempo.

Side 2 opens with Blues For The Night Owl. "I think this is one of the highlights of the album," Ramsey said. "I relate this to high school days. I would finish my homework and go to bed to that tune. It was disc jockey Sid McCoy's theme song. But then most of the things we did on this album have special meaning to us."

Perhaps of equal effect is Smoke Gets In Your Eyes, done here in 3/4 time. And after it was over Ramsey confided: "You know I gave Red a nickname that describes the way I feel about him, I call him Old Ironsides. I can be tired and don't feel like I have it during some sets and he'll come through with all the spark. We've never found his battery down." Eldee nodded his agreement. Red just smiled.

Autumn In New York was truly inspired. And Ramsey was feeling that way. The ending, heavy and dramatic, is all the more effective because of his insertion of a Manhattan phrase.

Gonna Set Your Soul On Fire, which completes the album, was in effect the Second Baptist church of their childhood revisited. Nobody can touch them on this one. It is fire and brimstone.

This album to me suggests jazz at its best. There is nearly a quartet of a century of conservatory training invested in this trio, but the academic devices serve only to facilitate the outpouring of soul. It is a perfect marriage. It is more music from the soil.

Marc Crawford

LP-679

James Moody – Moody With Strings




Released 1961

Recording and Session Information


Ray Alonge, John Barrows, Jimmy Buffingto, flugelhorn; James Moody, tenor saxophone, alto saxophone, flute; Joe Soldo, Leon Cohen, Phil Bodner, woodwinds; Tommy Flanagan, piano; George Duvivier, bass; Charlie Persip, drums; Torrie Zito, arranger
New York, July 5 & 6 1960, February 16, 1961

10677 Another day
10678 Dorian mood
10679 Fools rush in

James Moody, tenor saxophone, alto saxophone, flute; Hank Jones piano; John Beal, bass; Osie Johnson, drums; Leon Cohen, woodwinds; + large string orchestra, Elaine Vito, harp; Torrie Zito, arranger

10680 Dorothee
10681 A song of love
10682 All my life
10683 I remember Clifford

Burt Collins, Marky Markowitz, Don Stratton, trumpet; Tom McIntosh, Fred Zito, trombone; Ray Alonge, Richard Berg, flugelhorn; Don Butterfield, tuba; James Moody, tenor saxophone, alto saxophone, flute; Torrie Zito, pinao, arranger; George Duvivier, bass; Tom Gillen, drums

10684 Love walked in
10685 Love for sale
10686 Somerset
10687 I'm old fashioned

Track Listing

DorotheeTorrie ZitoJuly 5, 6 1960 / Feb 16 1961
Love For SaleCole PorterJuly 5, 6 1960 / Feb 16 1961
Another DayTorrie ZitoJuly 5, 6 1960 / Feb 16 1961
All My LifeDavis, AkstJuly 5, 6 1960 / Feb 16 1961
I'm Old FashionedKern, MercerJuly 5, 6 1960 / Feb 16 1961
Fools Rush InBloom, Mercer, BregmanJuly 5, 6 1960 / Feb 16 1961
SomersetTorrie ZitoJuly 5, 6 1960 / Feb 16 1961
I Remember CliffordBenny GolsonJuly 5, 6 1960 / Feb 16 1961
Love Walked InGeorge and Ira GershwinJuly 5, 6 1960 / Feb 16 1961
A Song Of LoveTorrie ZitoJuly 5, 6 1960 / Feb 16 1961
Dorian MoodTorrie ZitoJuly 5, 6 1960 / Feb 16 1961

Liner Notes

In the late and early 1940s, the music of Glenn Miller marked the end of an era; but simultaneously another era was underway. Modern jazz began to take form and was moving in many directions, Young musicians, restless and searching, were determined to extend the expressive range of this music.

Jazz musicians found a different of inspiration in the ideas of Stravinsky and Bach and blended these with the traditional jazz forms to produce a combination of musical elements which the world has never before heard, a combination which made possible a more extensive projection of the musicians own personal feelings. James Moody was one of those musicians.

The story of James Moody is a simple one, but it's the story of jazz — jazz here in America and around the world. Moody's life grew with jazz from an early age in Savannah, Ga., where he was born 36 years ago. His stay with Uncle Sam was from 1943.'46. Upon leaving the armed services, his services were employed by Dizzy Gillespie, with whose big band he played until 1948. He then went to Europe where he had series of record sessions in Stockholm and Paris. His record of I'm In The Mood For Love proved him to be one of our present day jazz giants.

Moody's flute work would be considered a recent venture, but a rapidly developing one. Moody's contributions to jazz has made it fertile music, exciting, alive, and stimulating to the mind as to the heart.

In this album you will find three moods of Moody — the happy mood, the mood to be wooed, and the sad mood. This comes aboue as the result of the meeting of jazz two most important elements; the message carrier and the writer of the message. In this case James Moody meets Torric Zito. Zito, a young New Yorker, supplies Moody with three different combinations (brass and rhythm, strings and rhythm, and woodwinds-horns and rhythm) to prove his talents as writer, arranger, and conductor. Of the eleven selections in this album' five are Zito's originals, the rest are standards arranged by Torrie to set up the three moods Moody displays here.

The album opens on soft and romantic note as Moody is heard on alto on Dorothee. Love, For Sale follows, and it's the real swinger of the lot as Moody moves deftly and chargingly on tenor through its changes. The brief but effective piano solo is by Zito.

Another Day is an amazing alto saxophone performance by James, played with beautiful tone and sensitive command. It is among his very finest recordings.

All My Life, which I have not heard done by a jazz artist for years, has more Of Zito's remarkable writing for strings and good tenor from Moody. I'm Old-Fashioned, with brass backing, and Fools Rush In, spotting thc wood- winds, complete the first side.

Side 2 opens with Somerset, a jazz waltz that swings compulsively, contains a chorus a Tom McIntosh's trombone, and finds Moody on alto again.

The salute to the late Clifford Brown is heartfelt on I Remember Clifford. Zito's writing is exactly right and Moody's tenor nothing short of beautiful.

Love Walked In is taken at slow trot as Moody turns to flute, then stays with that instrument on Zito's Song Of Love. Dorian Mood ends the album on an exhilarating note.

This is James Moody at his xery finest, and heard in a setting that supports him wonderfully well — the orchestra and arranging of Torrie Zito.

Al Clarke

LP-759

Lou Donaldson – Musty Rusty Released 1965 Recording and Session Information Bill Hardman, trumpet; Lou Donaldson, alto saxophone; Bil...